Immobility

Autor: Olkkola, Klaus T., Eleveld-Ufkes, Douglas, Gambus, Pedro L., Hendrickx, Jan F. A.
Přispěvatelé: Gambús, Pedro L., Hendrickx, Jan F. A., HUS Perioperative, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine, Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics, Clinicum, Critical care, Anesthesiology, Peri-operative and Emergency medicine (CAPE)
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Personalized Anaesthesia: Targeting Physiological Systems for Optimal Effect, 157-174
ISSUE=1;STARTPAGE=157;ENDPAGE=174;TITLE=Personalized Anaesthesia: Targeting Physiological Systems for Optimal Effect
Popis: Surgical anaesthesia usually requires hypnosis, antinociception (ensuring blood pressure and heart rate control) and immobility with varying degrees of muscle relaxation. However, the relative contribution of these three components to the state of anaesthesia may vary between different anaesthesias and surgical procedures. While volatile anaesthetics may be used to produce anaesthesia in and by themselves, most often anaesthesia is produced by a combination of drugs. Anaesthesia produced by the concomitant use of hypnotics, analgesics and neuromuscular blocking drugs is called ‘balanced anaesthesia’. Surgical anaesthesia usually requires hypnosis, antinociception (ensuring blood pressure and heart rate control) and immobility with varying degrees of muscle relaxation. However, the relative contribution of these three components to the state of anaesthesia may vary between different anaesthesias and surgical procedures. While volatile anaesthetics may be used to produce anaesthesia in and by themselves, most often anaesthesia is produced by a combination of drugs. Anaesthesia produced by the concomitant use of hypnotics, analgesics and neuromuscular blocking drugs is called ‘balanced anaesthesia’. © Pedro L. Gambús and Jan F.A. Hendrickx 2020.
Databáze: OpenAIRE